ROME – Organizers of the Venice Film Festival’s new production lab on Wednesday announced the initiative’s 15 semi-finalists -- which hail from a dozen different countries -- in the final step before three of them are picked for the festival’s backing.

Along with the Venice Film Market, the Biennale College production lab was one the two innovations put in place by new Venice artistic director Alberto Barbera after he was appointed to the position a year ago.

The initiative received some 433 submissions from 77 countries, each including a new project and a director and producer. The teams behind the 15 projects chosen Wednesday will each participate in a 10-day workshop to take place in Venice next month.

After the workshop, up to three finalists will be chosen. The team behind each of the final projects will paired with established industry professionals, given €150,000 ($197,000) each to help produce the film, and will be guaranteed a spot to screen at the 70th edition of the august Venice festival, which will take place August 28-Sept. 7 next year.

The U.S., U.K., and Israel were the three countries with more than one film selected in the group of 15, which are all first or second projects for their director.

Among the noteworthy projects chosen are Memphis, to be produced by John Baker and directed by Tim Sutton, whose debut feature, Pavilion, won one of the two jury prizes at the just-completed Turin Film Festival, the U.K.’s Into the Light from producer Alastair Clark and to be directed by Rowland Jobson, whose short film GirlLikeMe screened in Venice’s short film competition in 2009, and A Case of the Dismals, directed and produced by sisters Kim and MaiSpurlock.